Reserve Stem Cells Come to the Rescue

Our sense of smell is continually attacked by harsh chemicals that we unintentionally inhale, risking damage or death to our olfactory cells. Without these nerve cells, the only cells in the body to run directly to the brain with information of the outside world, we would lose our sense of smell.

But we may be able to repair the most severe damage to the nerves responsible for our sense of smell with the assistance of a backup supply of stem cell that were discovered by Johns Hopkins researchers. When adjacent cells die, the reserve cells move to correct the deficiency. But usually, they remain dormant. Next weeks online edition of Nature Neuroscience will repot on the new discovery.

Baby Hailey Fights Leukemia with Cord Blood Stem Cells

Many people have faced peril at some point in their lives, but 11-month old Hailey has already faced more than most people have in their entire lives. More is on the way.

Hailey has a propensity to snore softly when she sleeps. She has two teeth and blue eyes. But since she was three months old, the Simi Valley twin has also been on chemotherapy. Yet, the insistent form of leukemia she suffers from has not stopped.

But help is on the way. At the Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Hailey will get a stem cell transplant later this month. It is all thanks to an anonymous donor’s umbilical cord blood. The treatment will give her an opportunity to win her fight against leukemia. The risks are high, but the risk of not doing anything at all is higher: without treatment the leukemia will be fatal.

“She’s a pretty tough little girl,” said Hailey’s mother, Maria , biting off the words as she tried to explain how the family is managing. “Just don’t have a choice. Just doing it. Just believe she’ll be OK.”

Maria and Rick had a difficult time growing their family. They have a 21-year-old daughter named Heather, but nine miscarriages followed her birth. Thus, Hailey’s story has been dissimilar from the start. She was born along with her twin brother Ryan, from a surrogate who carried the embryos that produced the twins.

Ryan was born healthy, but at 3 months old, Hailey began to develop problems. She sustained a high fever that would not subside, and she began to vomit. She was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia after being rushed by ambulance to Children’s Hospital one day.

The disease makes some of the body’s white blood cells malignant, spurring them to grow uncontrollably.

“They oversuppress the other blood cells. They crowd them out,” said Dr. Neena Kapoor, director of the clinical bone marrow transplant program at Children

Research Reveals How Adult/Progenitor Cells Repair Tissue

Stem/progenitor cells acquired from a patient

MS Patient Chooses China Over U.S. Due to Cost

Mike will leave for China two weeks from today. He’s not much of a gambling man, but he decided to take one this time. With the hope that his multiple sclerosis will be brought under control, he will undergo adult stem cell treatment overseas.

Riley’s doctors only gave him negative opinions about the treatment abroad. But Riley was smarter than his doctors. He knew that he could become paralyzed in a few years due to his aggressive form of MS, and that he had run out of options in the United States. He couldn

Stem Cells Enhance Plastic Surgery Techniques

In order to fill wrinkles, perform breast augmentations, and enlarge any area of the body where more fullness is desired; stem cells are becoming an available option in the world of plastic surgery. Stem cells were approved this month for the use of cosmetic surgery in Britain and the European Union. It is likely that the United States will allow similar treatments in the future, especially with the added pressure of keeping up with the other countries who by approving the treatments, will undoubtedly make them more popular worldwide.

Using stem cells and fat derived from the patient

Stem Cells Lessen Suffering for People with Multiple Sclerosis

Therapeutics Daily

The redistribution of a patient’s own adult bone marrow cells as a method of stem cell treatment may lessen the suffering of their multiple sclerosis symptoms.

Professor Neil Scolding of the Institute of Neurosciences at Bristol University’s Frenchay Hospital is researching the use of adult bone marrow stem cells as a therapy treatment for MS.

This type of cell is already used to treat other common conditions such as cardiac disease. They can replace damaged cells by reforming and regenerating.

The scope of stem cell treatment is expanding everyday says Scolding. The Multiple Sclerosis Ireland organization will be hosting him this weekend at their annual conference.

“In the last three or four years we’ve found that stem cells have a number of properties that make them particularly valuable for [ treating] multiple sclerosis. We used to think of stem cells as an opportunity to replace another cell, but it turns out that there can actually be many more things: we can stimulate a local cell or suppress inflammation in its immediate surroundings, which is very valuable in MS,” he says.

The procedure would involve removing bone marrow from the patient and injecting back into the bloodstream making it rather straightforward. The cells would travel almost instinctively to those areas of the body that need attention says Scolding.

“When the cells are injected, they know where to go and from there we hope they will help the tissue to repair,” he says.

Well documented work with other stem cell therapies gives his current research a boost says Scolding. Proof backing up the scientific grounding of treatments in regards to stem cells used in procedures is cited in papers documenting years of successful bone marrow transplant recipients.

“One of the advantages of using bone marrow stem cells is that people for very different reasons have had bone marrow transplants, and they also got those cells,” he says.

“And that means we’ve got 30-40 years’ worth of clinical experience to prove that they are safe and don’t form tumors. They come from the patient and go back to the patient.”

However, as they continue to draw more controversy, embryonic stem cells are falling further behind in terms of research. Many people consider embryos an unethical source of stem cells because it involves the destruction of human embryos.

In contrast to their adult stem cell counterparts, embryonic stem cells are not as reliable says Scolding.

“Quite apart from the ethical questions, there are also very serious biological reasons why embryonic stem cells at the moment are not safe enough to use in therapy,” he says.

“They can form tumors and there is a question of rejection because you are introducing the stem cell into a different patient.”

Scolding says that the answer to the fight against a wide range of health issues can be found in adult stem cells. Before embryonic stem cells can be used as a treatment of any sort, they will need to prove themselves. The process could take at least 10-15 years, if ever added Scolding.

“People are thinking very seriously about using stem cells to treat Parkinson’s disease and diabetes,” he says.

“With MS, we’re not at the stage where we have a lot of results yet, but it’s the beginning of what we hope will be a long journey.”

Stem Cells Lessen Suffering for People with Multiple Sclerosis

The redistribution of a patient’s own adult bone marrow cells as a method of stem cell treatment may lessen the suffering of their multiple sclerosis symptoms.

Professor Neil Scolding of the Institute of Neurosciences at Bristol University’s Frenchay Hospital is researching the use of adult bone marrow stem cells as a therapy treatment for MS.

This type of cell is already used to treat other common conditions such as cardiac disease. They can replace damaged cells by reforming and regenerating.

The scope of stem cell treatment is expanding everyday says Scolding. The Multiple Sclerosis Ireland organization will be hosting him this weekend at their annual conference.

“In the last three or four years we’ve found that stem cells have a number of properties that make them particularly valuable for [ treating] multiple sclerosis. We used to think of stem cells as an opportunity to replace another cell, but it turns out that there can actually be many more things: we can stimulate a local cell or suppress inflammation in its immediate surroundings, which is very valuable in MS,” he says.

The procedure would involve removing bone marrow from the patient and injecting back into the bloodstream making it rather straightforward. The cells would travel almost instinctively to those areas of the body that need attention says Scolding.

“When the cells are injected, they know where to go and from there we hope they will help the tissue to repair,” he says.

Well documented work with other stem cell therapies gives his current research a boost says Scolding. Proof backing up the scientific grounding of treatments in regards to stem cells used in procedures is cited in papers documenting years of successful bone marrow transplant recipients.

“One of the advantages of using bone marrow stem cells is that people for very different reasons have had bone marrow transplants, and they also got those cells,” he says.

“And that means we’ve got 30-40 years’ worth of clinical experience to prove that they are safe and don’t form tumors. They come from the patient and go back to the patient.”

However, as they continue to draw more controversy, embryonic stem cells are falling further behind in terms of research. Many people consider embryos an unethical source of stem cells because it involves the destruction of human embryos.

In contrast to their adult stem cell counterparts, embryonic stem cells are not as reliable says Scolding.

“Quite apart from the ethical questions, there are also very serious biological reasons why embryonic stem cells at the moment are not safe enough to use in therapy,” he says.

“They can form tumors and there is a question of rejection because you are introducing the stem cell into a different patient.”

Scolding says that the answer to the fight against a wide range of health issues can be found in adult stem cells. Before embryonic stem cells can be used as a treatment of any sort, they will need to prove themselves. The process could take at least 10-15 years, if ever added Scolding.

“People are thinking very seriously about using stem cells to treat Parkinson’s disease and diabetes,” he says.

“With MS, we’re not at the stage where we have a lot of results yet, but it’s the beginning of what we hope will be a long journey.”

Child with Brain Injury Due to Shattered Skull will Travel to China for Stem Cells

Tom and Mandy say that,

Fundraiser Supports Umbilical Cord Stem Cell Research in Australia

The breakthrough that umbilical cord stem cells can help in the treatment of Leukemia patients has been among the most astonishing of all the discoveries in modern medical research.

Giving patients with blood-disorders another hope for a cure, researchers have discovered that normal bone marrow stem cells can be found in umbilical cord blood extracted from the cords of healthy babies.

A national charity called Inner Wheel Australia wants discoveries like the one mentioned above to continue. That is why they have held an event called

19 Year Old Suffering from Cerebral Palsy Makes Dramatic Improvement

A breakthrough in the treatment of Cerebral Palsy was announced today. The safe and non-invasive procedure was performed on 19-year-old Gabor from Hungary using neural stem cells. The treatment was administered at Tiantan Puhua Neurosurgical Hospital which is famous for its world leading treatments for stroke and Parkinson